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Senior Engineer at a tech company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Vendor
I can fit 40 logical cores and 400GB of RAM into one half-height blade. That allows me to achieve my desired density in a cloud environment.

What is most valuable?

Fitting 40 logical cores and 400GB of RAM into one half-height blade allows me to achieve the density in a cloud environment I aim for. What's more is it handles workloads of 25 VMs and more without any noticeable penalty performance-wise. Despite having 20 physical cores running into two sockets on one board, the vCPU-ready times remain good throughout, while averaging 4 X vCPU for each physical core per blade.

How has it helped my organization?

The density achieved by the M630 while maintaining good performance allowed us to cut our hardware footprint by more than half. This makes for a huge cost saving, not only for hardware to maintain and rack space rental costs, but also reduces the required overall hypervisor licensing, which doesn't come cheap.

What needs improvement?

For a half-height blade, Dell did well with this one, not leaving much room for improvement. The ever-increasing boot time due to ever-increasing POST checks with every new generation makes maintenance tasks somewhat of a headache. That and the occasional chip creep causes one to have to re-seat DIMMs from time to time. Other than that, not much can be said in terms of cons.

If Dell can reduce the chip creep specially on the RAM modules that would e great. This does not occur that often but often enough to try and improve on. Each blade having each own iDRAC instance makes sense for connecting to a single blade on an ad-hoc base but becomes pain when having to access the local console for all blades in a chassis one after the other.

Each connection requires downloading the java aplet from the blade and jumping though a few hoops before it runs. When closing the aplet and one needs to connect to that same blade again the entire process needs to be repeated again. Performing this same task on an IBM blade chassis is a breeze. The CMC provides one with a drop down list listing all slots in the chassis. This allows one switch between local console mode for all blades in the chassis without any repetitive aplet downloads or even having to configure a management IP address for each blade.

Even though this is more of a blade chassis feature than a blade feature Dell would do well in stealing this page from IBM's book.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using it for almost one year.

Buyer's Guide
Dell PowerEdge M
June 2025
Learn what your peers think about Dell PowerEdge M. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: June 2025.
857,028 professionals have used our research since 2012.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

These units have proven very stable. Even with component failure, in most cases, the unit keeps running, allowing one to migrate workloads off of it first, before attending to any break\fixes.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

This solution has proven very scalable.

How are customer service and support?

Technical support generally is acceptable. Having to jump through hoops can sometime be frustrating. Especially when your firmware has to be on the latest version before further assistance will be given. Even though I understand the logic behind it, keeping an entire environment on the latest version is nearly impossible at the rate firmware, drivers and other patches are released.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

I have used IBM blade chassis before. The change to Dell at the time was more a financial one - one that I now fully support from a technical perspective.

How was the initial setup?

Setting up the solution is fairly straightforward. If you have any experience on rack-mounts historically, it should all be familiar. Some networking and storage zoning is to be expected as well, though.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

The price tag on the M630 can easily be compared to that of most beefy rack mounts out there. And that with very little internal storage. If the aim is raw processing power in a dense and scalable solution with shared storage available, little out there will rival it. Keeping an eye on the exchange rate can make for some huge cost saving, as well, especially when looking to purchase a fully populated 16-blade chassis.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Having used predecessors like the M610 and M620 over the years, refreshing with M630s was the obvious choice.

What other advice do I have?

When increasing the core count of the CPU when requesting a quote, be wary of the big jumps in price going from an 8-core CPU to 10-core or more etc. Dell doesn't give a price per component breakdown on their quotes. Getting two quotes for the same blade where only the CPUs differ will clearly indicate the huge price they associate per core.

Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
PeerSpot user
Technician at Sheeltron Digital Systems Private Limited
Reseller
Top 5Leaderboard
Has an efficient GUI and good technical support services
Pros and Cons
  • "It helps us to manage multiple chassis from a single website."
  • "The firmware updates for the product need improvement."

What is most valuable?

Dell PowerEdge M works as a CMC solution. It helps us to manage multiple chassis from a single website.

What needs improvement?

The firmware updates for the product need improvement.

For how long have I used the solution?

We have been using Dell PowerEdge M for ten years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

The product is stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

It is a scalable platform. We have enterprise customers using it.

How are customer service and support?

We have a dedicated team for technical support. However, we contact Dell's support team in case of complicated issues. They provide us with all the essential resources to resolve the queries.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

How was the initial setup?

The product has a user-friendly GUI for configuration. The deployment time depends on the requirements. In case of deploying it on OpenShift or Windows cluster, it takes more time than usual.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

The product is neither expensive nor cheap. It is manageable for medium enterprises as well.

What other advice do I have?

It is a good product with an effective monitoring feature. I rate Dell PowerEdge M a ten out of ten.

Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer: partner
PeerSpot user